News Archive

Image Title Published
View from Daybreak Star Indian Cultural Center
American Indian Studies Department Announces Securing $1.45 million grant from Mellon Foundation
Canoe Journey 2023, Paddle to Muckleshoot, Honoring our Warriors Past and Present, part 1
Canoe Journey 2023, Paddle to Muckleshoot, Honoring our Warriors Past and Present
Professor Joshua L. Reid
AIS Professor Josh Reid interviewed for Seattle Times article on Lummi fishing
Sketch of proposed canoe house on South Lake Union by architecture firm
Seattle Announces Plans for New Canoe Carving House
Philip Red Eagle showing students paddles in the Burke collections
CAIIS Launches the First UW Canoe Family
Stuart Heslop, AIS and Linguistics major, Class of 2022, profile
Couldn't Be Prouder - AIS's First Departmental Honors Graduate
Leonard Forsman
Leonard Forsman named first Native American on UW Board of Regents
Tami Hohn writes the word 'alive' in Southern Lushootseed
Lushootseed Thriving at AIS - Tami Hohn Hired as Permanent Full-Time Southern Lushootseed Instructor
Canoe paddle sculptures outside Burke Museum, cover for Indigenous Walking Tour booklet
UW Indigenous Walking Tour Now Available!
Professor Kathryn Bunn-Marcuse
Surveying the Native art of the Pacific Northwest
artist Joe Seymour in front of his installed salmon artwork
AIS Instructor Joe Seymour Brings Coast Salish Salmon to Olympia Waterfront
Owen Oliver at the UW Intellectual House
Owen Oliver featured in College's Newsletter for his Indigenous Walking Tour
Sample shot of new website identifying Coast Salish art in King County
New Tool Helps Locate Coast Salish Art in King County
Chris Teuton, chair of American Indian Studies at the UW, displays the next letter for the group to practice. Teuton is Cherokee. (Alan Berner/The Seattle Times)
The Seattle Times joins us for Southern Lushootseed class
Silence is violence. how will you use your voice?
February 14th Idle No More
Autumn 2012 Course: Two-Dimensional Art of the Northwest Coast Indians